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  • What's up, everyone, Nelson Dellis here for another episode of Random Memory Tips,

  • and in this video, I'm gonna teach you how to memorize any lines of text, any lines of poetry really quick.

  • It's a really simple, and I don't even know how it works, technique for memory and memorizing those kinds of things.

  • You gotta see this, let's go.

  • (energetic rhythmic music)

  • So, I learned this technique watching another YouTube video.

  • It's not something that I came up with or had ever heard about until I watched Lauren Tothero's video on this.

  • I don't know where she got it from either or if she came up with it, but I tried it and it involves like zero memory techniques.

  • It's just kind of doing this process that your brain somehow gobbles up this information and it is able to spew it back out.

  • It's insane. - Wait.

  • I will say that if you do this, yes, you'll get the lines in your heads really fast,

  • but you then have to maybe apply a memory palace technique to help kind of solidify it there for longer periods of time.

  • But if you're on set, if you're about to deliver something and you need to get those lines right in your head, this technique is almost fool-proof.

  • I have a goal in mind, but I think to start we could do something very simple like this random line from a random poem called Sasquatch.

  • The Sasquatch squats, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbed.

  • That's the first two lines.

  • You read over that line, or lines, a couple times to kinda get the gist of it in your head.

  • Okay, so the Sasquatch squats, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbed.

  • Sasquatch squats, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbed.

  • Then what you do is, and do it with a pen on a piece of paper just so you get that visual memory, is write down the first letter of each word.

  • So, the is just the T, S for Sasquatch, and include punctutation and capitals if they have capital letters.

  • Squats comma flowers in hand comma on an old stump by the riverbed period.

  • This is what I have.

  • Doesn't look like much, but then what you try to do is try to read this, right?

  • Try to read what it actually is just using the first letter of each word.

  • And so it may seem a bit impossible, but if you think about it and you remember a little bit the visual things that you saw when you first read it, you can kinda put it together.

  • And if you can't get it, you can always kind of look back, but you should be able to get this pretty quick.

  • So, the Sasquatch squats, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbank.

  • I think.

  • Bed.

  • So, then what you do is once you kinda have that, read this over a couple times in your head.

  • The Sasquatch squats, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbed.

  • The Sasquatch squats, flower in hand, flowers in hand, on an old stump by the riverbed.

  • That's it.

  • Now, that's not that impressive just because that's just two lines, so let's try it maybe with something a little more complicated like--

  • Nick, I want to explain.

  • What's there to explain?

  • But I just want to say that--

  • Look, I'm not the first guy who fell in love with a girl he met in a restaurant who then turned out to be the daughter of a kidnapped scientist,

  • only to lose her to a childhood lover who she'd last seen on a deserted island and who turned out, 15 years later, to be the leader of the French Underground.

  • I know it.

  • It all sounds like some bad movie.

  • Just to reiterate what the quote is exactly, I'm not the first guy who fell in love with woman that he met at a restaurant who turned out to be the daughter of a kidnapped scientists,

  • only to lose her to her childhood lover who she last saw on a deserted island who then turned out, 15 years later, to be the leader of the French Underground.

  • Yeah.

  • Well, it's a little confusing.

  • Maybe I'll read it one more time.

  • First guy who fell in love with a woman that he met at a restaurant who turned out to be the daughter of a kidnapped scientist,

  • only to lose her to her childhood lover who she last saw on a deserted island who then turned out, 15 years later, to be the leader of the French Underground.

  • Now, this next step is to write down all those letters, just the first letters, and I think it helps if you write it in the same format that you're reading it.

  • So if something skips the next line, you should write it out that way.

  • That way you have the visual memory of it when you read it, the visual memory when you write it down,

  • and then then you try to actually remember it with all those pieces together, you actually have kind of an amazing blueprint of it in your head.

  • Here it is.

  • Yeah, that's a lot of letters, right?

  • So, let's try to read it.

  • Let me see if I can read it.

  • I have it here in case I need to look over.

  • The first few times, just try to get through it.

  • I'm not the first guy who fell in love with a woman that he met at a restaurant who then turned out to be the daughter of a kidnapped scientist,

  • only to lose her to her childhood lover who she last saw on a deserted island who then turned out, 15 years later, to be the leader of the French Underground.

  • Alright, let's try this.

  • I'm not the first guy who fell in love with a woman who he met at a restaurant who then turned out to be the daughter of a kidnapped scientist,

  • only to lose her to her childhood lover who she last seen on a deserted island who then turned out, 15 years later, to be the leader of the French Underground.

  • Boom. Yes.

  • Alright, thank you guys.

  • That was a short one.

  • Pretty easy, not much memory to it, but I hope it helps you.

  • A lot of people ask me how do I remember specific texts really quickly, and most of the time I tell them just to use a memory palace, but that takes a process.

  • It takes up some time, so this is actually a really quick method and I think it's fun.

  • It's kinda weird how it just gets absorbed and anyone can do it, so go ahead and try that, and I hope it helps you guys.

  • I'll see you in the next video.

  • Make sure to like, subscribe, all the things.

  • I'll see you very shortly.

  • Thanks, guys, peace.

  • (energetic rhythmic music)

What's up, everyone, Nelson Dellis here for another episode of Random Memory Tips,

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HOW TO MEMORIZE LINES INSTANTLY (SERIOUSLY)

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